Embolo gives Monaco winning start in Serbia

AS Monaco edged a narrow victory against Red Star Belgrade in Serbia on Thursday, as Philippe Clement’s men got their Europa League campaign off to the perfect start.

The importance of the result mustn’t be underestimated, nor should the performance put in to achieve it be undervalued. As Philippe Clement pointed-out post-match, before Monaco’s victory, only one other team has come away with the win from the Red Star stadium in European competition in the last three years.

It is also, theoretically, the club’s toughest fixture of the group stages. Whilst the trips to Ferencváros and Trabzonspor will prove challenging, Monaco have already faced the top-ranked side away.

Just as it was against Nice, Monaco’s game plan was based upon defensive strength and verticality in the transitions. Their first chance came from one such transition. Aleksandr Golovin won the ball back, feeding it into Wissam Ben Yedder, who put Mohamed Camara in on goal, but the Malian international’s effort curled just wide.

It was a game of few gilt-edged chances in the Serbian cauldron, but Monaco still had to rely on goalkeeper Alexander Nübel to make some important saves to keep the scores level.

Monaco got their opener in rather innocuous circumstances. A harmless cross was played over the head of Golovin, who whilst trying to turn and retrieve the ball was clipped and sent tumbling, with the referee pointing to the spot.

Breel Embolo, who scored the only goal at Nice on Sunday stepped up to drive the penalty home and continue his impressive start in Monégasuqe colours. Monaco could have had a second when the referee pointed to the spot again after Embolo was felled in the box. However, VAR replays showed that the Red Star defender had got a touch on the ball and the original decision was rightly overturned.

That decision was ultimately inconsequential as Monaco held on for the victory. Despite the victory, Clement bemoaned Monaco’s end-product, saying that his team “lacked the final ball.” Therefore, despite consecutive victories, there are areas still for improvement. Clement will be hoping that his side has more of a cutting edge when Lyon visit the Stade Louis II on Sunday evening.

 

 

Photo source: AS Monaco

 

 

 

 

 

The rise of the digital sector in Monaco: a breakdown of figures

A new report shows that there were a record number of digital-sector businesses last year in Monaco, generating close to a billion euros in revenue and showing that the State’s digital transition is well on track.

Monaco’s digital economy is defined by four activity groups, namely Advertising and Communication, Information and Communications Technology (ICT), Content and Media, and Other.

And it is certainly an industry on the rise.

IMSEE’s latest Focus report on the digital economy in Monaco shows that there were 915 active companies working under one of these four digital categories in 2021, up by 49 establishments over 2020, and beating out pre-pandemic 2019 by 84.

This steady rise shows important development in the digital sector, which now accounts for 9% of all active companies in the Principality. Broken down, Advertising and Communication are the biggest with 48.7% of the total number of entities, followed by ICT at 38.9%, Content and Media at 12.1%, and Other with 0.2%.

Digital generated €858.8 million in revenue last year, a yearly increase of 18.4%, with ITC notably accounting for 61.6% of that amount.

Content and Media took in nearly a quarter of the revenue at 24.1%, while Advertising and Communication accounted for 14.1%. It marks a significant growth of 32.6% for this category in just 12 months.

Overall, the fast-growing digital sector made up 6.1% of the Principality’s revenue in 2021.

Digital boosts employment opportunities

It is a sector that employs 1,810 people in Monaco, 83 more than in 2020, with the lion’s share, 1,300, working in ICT. More than 70% of those working in digital jobs are men, broken down into 1,275 male versus 534 female workers. This is roughly 10 points higher than in other private sector employees, however women are represented differently depending on the job. In ICT, only one in four workers are women whereas in Content and Media, it is equally split.

Most of these workers, 88.9%, live in France in either the neighbouring towns or in the Alpes-Maritimes. Italy is underrepresented for the average, with only 2% of employees hailing from there.

The average age of the digital worker in Monaco is 41.4 years old, slightly younger than the overall average of 42.5.

 

 

 

Photo credit: Christopher Gower on Unsplash

 

 

 

 

Video: European Commission lays out response to energy crisis

As Europe grapples with a worsening energy situation, European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen has given a statement about the EU’s current and future plans to lessen dependence on Russia.

The war in Ukraine has been a disaster for Europe on many levels, but it has made one thing crystal clear: The European Union was a bit naive to rely on Russia for so much of their energy supplies.

This hard lesson is coming into sharp focus now that the Russia has declared that it will not reopen to the Nord Stream pipeline, the single biggest to Europe, until sanctions against the country have been lifted.

Now that energy supplies are being used as a weapon against the EU, the bloc has no choice but to look at ways of lessening dependence on Moscow and this was laid out in a speech by European Commission (EC) President Ursula von der Leyen on Wednesday.

A series of measures had already been put in place, such as asking people to reduce gas usage to create reserves, which has been a success. The goal was to reach 80% in joint storage by the end of October, and there is currently a supply of 82%.

The EU also has been moving away from reliance on Russian fossil fuels, with coal no longer being imported at all and oil imports “winding down”. Countries such as Norway, the United States, Algeria and Azerbaijan have stepped in to fill the gap with Norway now delivering more gas to the EU than Russia.

Additionally, and perhaps the most important measure, has been the investment in renewable energy supplies. Von der Leyen said the EU “will deploy renewables this year that are an equivalent to around about eight billion cubic metres. So, the renewables are really our energy insurance for the future.”

Amid sky-rocketing electricity prices, the drought lessening hydro-electric output, and more than half of France’s nuclear reactors out of action, the EC president outlined more immediate plans. First is reducing electricity usage during peak hours via a mandatory target. This will be coupled with a revenue cap on energy companies with low costs.

“The low-carbon energy sources are making in these times enormous revenues because they have low costs but they have high prices on the market,” said Von der Leyen. “Revenues they never calculated with; revenues they never dreamt of; and revenues they cannot reinvest to that extent. These revenues do not reflect their production costs. So, it is now time for the consumers to benefit from the low costs of low-carbon energy sources like, for example, the renewables.”

The same treatment will be applied to the oil and gas companies whose prices will be capped to deter profiteering.

She also spoke about energy companies’ current inability to cope with this volatile market. Her solution: look to more safe sources.

“Here, it is a problem of securing futures markets. And for that, liquidity is needed. These companies are currently being requested to provide unexpected large amounts of funds now, which threatens their capacity not only to trade, but also the stability of the futures markets. It is a liquidity problem. Therefore, we will help to facilitate the liquidity support by Member States for energy companies. We will update our temporary framework and enable thus state guarantees to be delivered rapidly.”

Her final point was a proposition to put a price cap on Russian gas and slowly strangle their economy into submission.

“We all know that our sanctions are deeply grinding into the Russian economy, with a heavy negative impact, she said. “But Putin is partially buffering through fossil fuel revenues. So here, the objective is: We must cut Russia’s revenues, which Putin uses to finance his atrocious war in Ukraine. And now our work of the last months really pays off. Because, at the beginning of the war, if you looked at the imported gas, 40% of it was Russian gas, since a long time. Today, we are down to 9% only.”

What’s on: Beaulieu Classic Festival

The Beaulieu Classic Festival is celebrating two decades of musical artistry and entertainment, and this year’s line-up is filled with amazing talent in beautiful settings, with the added promise of it being: “Classical…But not only!”

This year’s musical programme for the 20th Beaulieu Classic Festival is set to be unlike other events of this kind, with free concerts, a gala dinner and candlelight performances.

According to the organisers, “Being a festival among many others would not satisfy our public accustomed to the prestigious concerts of the Operas of Monaco or Nice. We had to be different with an atypical program composed of musicians selected for their artistic qualities and their original personalities.”

It kicks off on 10th September in the Place Marinoni with pianist Steve-Villa Massone playing to the crowds, followed by a parade of local schoolchildren accompanied by musicians on stilts around the village. That evening at 9pm, a free concert on the Petite Afrique Beach will take place with the National Orchestra of Cannes playing works by Mozart and Haydn, followed at 10:15pm by a fireworks display.

On the 11th, Jean-François Zygel, improvisational pianist and composer, will be at the Casino de Beaulieu at 6:30pm giving audiences a chance to hear his off-beat and off-the-cuff style.

A free concert on the Petite Afrique Beach will take place with the National Orchestra of Cannes, photo credit Beaulieu Classic Festival

On Tuesday 13th September is award-winning string quartet Quatuor Van Kuijk, who has graced major concert halls around the globe and will be playing in the intimate setting of the lovely Saint Michael’s Chruch.

Next up on Wednesday the 14th are Les Itinerantes, a three-woman a capella sensation, who will be performing during a candlelit concert at Saint Michael’s Church at 8pm, adding an air of mystery and glamour to the event.

Trumpeter Lucienne Renaudin-Vary and accordionist Félicien Brut happily share the stage for the next concert on the 15th at the Casino de Beaulieu at 8pm. The pair perform a heady mix from musette ball to opera, from jazz to romantic masterpieces, in a something-for-everyone evening.

Friday the 16th is the Gala Dinner at the Royal Riviera Hotel for the 20th anniversary with a Roaring Twenties themed night. The dinner show will feature Gaby the Magnificent in a “jazzy musical comedy” combining theatre, singing, and dancing in one fabulous show. There will also be a semi-gastronomic dinner in keeping with theme from Le Jasmin Restaurant.

The Festival concludes on Saturday 17th September with the piano playing duo of Mathias and Julien Cadez, who use a single piano and play side-by-side to amazing effect. The pair combine music, humour and magic in a can’t miss spectacle reminiscent of the great Charlie Chaplin himself.

For more information and tickets, visit the website at https://www.beaulieuclassicfestival.com/programme/

 

Photo above of the Beaulieu Casino

 

 

Book your tickets: AMLA Gala to transport guests to mystical Bolivia

The Association Monegasque for Latin America is hosting its annual gala at the Yacht Club of Monaco in September and it will be a spectacular showcase of everything that exotic Bolivia has to offer.

The Association Monegasque for Latin America (AMLA) is teaming up with No Finish Line International for a big night that the organisers are calling two nights in one. The Mystical Bolivia Gala 2022, being held at the Yacht Club of Monaco on 17th September, is introducing Bolivia to attendees whilst also introducing the exporting of No Finish Line Monaco to the South American country.

The night will be filled with authentic experiences involving renowned chefs, artists, musicians, cinema stars and fashion designers to show all the wonders Bolivia has to offer.

The gala will start with a welcome gathering on the Sunset Deck starting at 7pm where guests can enjoy watching chefs cook live, cocktails, painting, an art auction, traditional dance performances, a tombola, and music by Bebe Aponte. Additionally, No Finish Line’s first ever event in the cosmopolitan Bolivian hub of Santa Cruz will be introduced with 2023 being the inaugural year.

At 8:30pm, the crowd moves to the Gala Fusion Dinner Party where the two organisations will make short presentations and show a video about Bolivia followed by introductions to the chefs, a fashion show by Ropsita Hurtado, Deanna Canedo Patiño, Las Diablas and Miss Bolivia 2021 Nahemi Uequin, and guitar music by Piral Vaca. The awards ceremony and announcement of tombola winners comes next with Bolivian actor and singer Milton Cortez performing live as well as the ancestral dance show by ACF. The jam-packed night will continue into the wee hours with music and dancing with Bonny Lovy and Matamba.

The Mystical Bolivia Gala will benefit the Public Women’s Hospital in Santa Cruz as well as efforts being made to diagnose congenital chagas in newborns from infected mothers. The disease is caused by the parasite Trypanosoma cruzi, which is transmitted to animals and people by insects and is found only in the Americas, mainly in rural areas of Latin America where poverty is widespread. If left untreated, chagas can be deadly.

 AMLA is a non-governmental humanitarian organisation based in the Principality. Its main goal is to build a community where members and any interested parties can build alliances and explore synergistic ideas.

Aside from the gala, they also organise workshops, conferences and musical shows that boast “authentic entertainment, state of the art production and exquisite occupancy”.

Tickets for the Mystical Bolivia Gala are available via email at info@amlamonaco.com or through the event’s website on www.amlagala.com

 

 

 

 

Princely family join Monegasques for annual picnic

Prince Albert, Princess Charlene and their children celebrated the much-loved U Cavagnëtu annual picnic on Saturday, the first time the event has been held in two years.

The annual open-air “picnic” U Cavagnëtu draws in around 1,000 Monegasque citizens each year at the Princess Antoinette Park to celebrate the last big event of the summer.

It has not been held the previous two years due to Covid, so there was an extra air of excitement at this, the 2022 edition, not least because the Princely family were present.

Prince Albert, Princess Charlene, Hereditary Prince Jacques and Princess Gabriella all joined in the celebration. The couple delighted crowds by mingling among the guests, Prince Albert learning more about his people’s summer vacations, Princess Charlene taking pictures with young Monegasques alongside her own seven-year-old children.

Princess Charlene poses for a photo with guests at the annual Monaco Picnic alongside her daughter Gabriella. Photo credit: Eric Mathon, Prince’s Palace

The Mairie started U Cavagnëtu, or Monaco Picnic, in 1931 and it was embraced by Prince Rainier III, who at one point held it at the local football stadium. It has since become a popular and well-loved family event held in the Princess Antoinette Park.

The event is opened with a mass before Monegasque tradition is celebrated with folk dancing, traditional dress, music and local food.

 

See more photos of the annual Monaco Picnic below. All photos credit: Eric Mathon, Prince’s Palace…